Abstract [en]

The study aims to demonstrate a deeper understanding in how singers can use different tools to shape and communicate music, and the order of priority and functions of these tools. To attain knowledge about this, I have applied different theories of musical communication, in addition to a multimodal and social semiotic perspective with focus on communication as a social process of sign making. This has been examined through qualitative interviews with eight active and former professional singers in various genres. The results show that the singers use many different tools to shape and communicate music, of which the most predominant are voice-technique, interplay, expectations from the audience, personality and tradition. The singers usage and priority of these tools can be summarised in different overall ways of musical communication, of which tradition and personality are the most conspicuous. One conclusion is that the musical expression of a singer can be described as a weave of communicative structures, and that the singers strive to achieve a wholeness of these structures to yield meaning. Another conclusion is that singers may emphasize different aspects of the musical communication at different stages in a performance, that this may occur at different levels simultaneously, and that the musical context decides how the musical communication is being shaped. Finally, I want to describe the singers’ function as achieving completeness in the musical expression by creating, interpreting and imitating different resources by using different tools, thereby creating a meaningful musical communication to the audience, in interplay with other musicians and the singer.